Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: March 19, 1864., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Hite or search for Hite in all documents.

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, John Egerton, and Alfred Baker, arrested on the charge of being persons of evil fame, and deserters from the Confederate service, were ordered to report forthwith to the Provost Marshal. James Edwards, James Doyle, Thomas Emory, and Robert, Hite, were charged with stealing two trunks, containing a valuable assortment of wearing apparel, the property of Mrs. Mary Johnson. The testimony for the Commonwealth was of such a character as to determine the Mayor to remand Edwards, Emory, and HitHite, for further examination before the Hustings Court. Doyle was discharged. A similar decision was announced in the case of Ann Page, a free negroes, charged with receiving the above articles, knowing them to have been stolen. Ann Finn and Ellen and Margaret Brown, the first charged with using abusive and threatening language towards James B Smith, and the two latter with being free negroes from Culpeper county, without proper papers, were proven to have been captured in that county some